| Radio Emission from Normal Galaxies: It is understood that a very large black hole resides at the heart of every 
galaxy - our own galaxy has one. This object is often called a supermassive 
black hole - meaning they are very large, at least 100 solar masses or more. Material that is near this supermassive black hole will be accelerated and 
release very high energy radiation. Galaxies that are undergoing this event is 
called an active galaxy. More information on this is found in the
Galaxy 
section. A normal galaxy is one that does not have material for the supermassive black 
hole to "feed" on. But even if these normal galaxies are quite in regards to 
core activity, they still emit in other wavelengths. There are three sources of 
emission outside the optical band in normal galaxies: 
	Synchrotron RadiationThermal EmissionBremsstrahlung Thermal emission are the most dominant. This emission comes from the billions 
of stars that reside in a galaxy. Synchrotron emission comes from the supernova 
remnants of the large stars that have ended their lives in a supernova. 
Bremsstrahlung (braking radiation) comes from the emission from HII regions 
(ionized hydrogen gas). An example of a normal galaxy emitting in multiple wavelengths is the spiral 
galaxy M81: 
	
		|  |  |  
		| X-Ray Image | Ultraviolet Image |  
		|  |  |  
		| Visible Image | Near Infrared |  
		|  |  |  
		| Mid Infrared | Far Infrared |  
		|  |  |  
		| Radio Image | Image credits |  The X-Ray and Ultraviolet images show areas of intense star birth and 
locations of very bright, hot stars. The infrared images show the more cooler 
red stars and dust areas surrounding bright stars. The Radio image shows the 
distribution of hydrogen through the galaxy. In addition, radio emission can 
also result from residual supernova remnants. In radio and the far infrared, bursts of star formation are optically thin - 
the brightness in these regions is a good indicator of star formation rate. 
Bremsstrahlung from these regions can sometimes be competitive with synchrotron 
radiation but can be difficult to determine. Most easily recognized is 
synchrotron radiation at about 1 GHz, which arises from old relativistic 
electrons which have moved a long way from the supernova remnants in which they were created. The 
supernova remnant 
themselves may have long since merged with the interstellar medium and are 
no longer visible (C. 
Flynn, 2005). Back to Top |